Titanium carbonitride (TiCN) is a coating that’s commonly used on cutting tools and indexable inserts. In fact, more than 90 percent of all indexable inserts coated via chemical vapor deposition (CVD) have at least one layer of TiCN, according to Reinhard Pitonak, engineer of research and development for Boehlerit (one of the six companies that constitute the LMT Group). Mr. Pitonak says the prime reason for the TiCN coating is to prevent insert wear.

TiCN coatings that contain very small carbon and nitrogen particles—those ranging in size from 50 to 300 nanometers—tend to possess good wear-resistance characteristics, Mr. Pitonak explains. To that end, Boehlerit developed a TiCN coating using particles measuring just 25 nanometers. What the company found was that the fine particle size combined with a very-high-temperature CVD coating process resulted in an unconventional, yet beneficial TiCN surface structure.

The nanocrystalline coating it created has a needle-like surface structure. This surface allows the TiCN coating, which the company calls Nanolock, to “interlock” with a succeeding layer of an aluminum oxide coating. This very strong adhesion between the two coatings makes the aluminum oxide, which offers protection against excessive heat during machining, less likely to delaminate during a cut. The combined abrasion-resistance properties of TiCN with the heat-resistance properties of aluminum oxide enables users to achieve higher cutting speeds and a longer insert life, Mr. Pitonak says.